Background
Miles was born at Wilton, Roxburghshire, Scotland, to journeyman mason William Miles and Louisa, née Wiggins.
Miles was born at Wilton, Roxburghshire, Scotland, to journeyman mason William Miles and Louisa, née Wiggins.
He was educated at Edinburgh and apprenticed to a stonemason in northern England.
He was employed at Newcastle and then Consett in Durham, where he joined the Independent Labour Party. Employed as a meatworker from 1920 to 1923 he represented the Australian Meat Industry Employees" Union on the Trades and Labor Council before returning to stonemasonry and representing the United Operative Stonemasons" Society of Queensland. Miles disliked middle-class communist converts, condemning Fred Paterson and John Anderson.
Miles visited the Soviet Union 1934-1935 and on his return embarked on a national tour to promote the communist cause.
During the early 1930s he also had an affair with writer and fellow communist Jean Devanny. Miles adopted the pseudonym "A. Mason" after the Certified Public Accountants was banned in 1940 and re-emerged after the party was rehabilitated by the Soviet Union"s entry into the war, but he was overshadowed by Sharkey.
He died at Naremburn in 1969 and was cremated.
Miles was recruited to the Queensland Socialist League in 1918 and was a founding member of the Communist Party of Australia (Certified Public Accountants) in 1920. He was described by an ASIO officer in 1953 as the "Grand Old Manitoba of Australian Communism", and remained firmly committed to the cause throughout the revelations concerning Stalinism in the early 1950s.